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“I’m continuing to do what’s best for the county,” Hambrick said during a break in the meeting. “Many (of Wednesday night’s) decisions involve a lot of money. Money that we don’t know what the total is. I’m really concerned about the budget and we’re coming into budget season. We’ve already had an audit done and that one was $160,000 and now they’re asking for another one.”

The meeting, which drew a packed house of more than 200, hit a snag as members of the community expressed concern over the board’s decision to rename the yet-to-open Wole Ralph Recreation Center in Lovejoy. The center, which got its name in a community contest, will now be known as the South Clayton Recreation Center.

Some questioned the decision, citing other facilities that bear the names of former county officials, including some who left office in disgrace. Hambrick pushed to have public comment introduced early in the meeting but Turner, Rooks and Edmondson voted against her request.

“No one is more deserving of having a recreation center than Wole Ralph,” resident Linda Crawley Simmons said. “What reason are you going to give for changing the name?”

Crawley Simmons said she hoped “vindictiveness and backbiting” would not mar the new board’s work.

Overall, members of the community appeared to embrace the makeup of the new board. Turner and Rooks received standing ovations at the start of the meeting.

“I feel great,” Turner said just before the board headed into executive session. “And I’m looking forward to the upcoming year. Obviously, it’s humbling to see I still have the support of the community.”

Wednesday’s meeting is part of a larger overhaul in county leadership as a result of last fall’s election. In addition to the new County Commission members, voters elected a new sheriff as well as three new school board members, tossing out a slate of candidates who ironically rode into office eight years ago on a similar platform of change.

The shakeup comes as Clayton continues to emerge from an economic downturn that has left the county with high unemployment and foreclosures and a shaky school system.

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